Researcher calls for more science, less art, in designing human/computer interfaces by Erik Jul
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1
edition published
in
1991
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
Summary of a talk given by John M. Carroll, Manager of User Interface Theory and Design at IBM, as part of the Nov. 12, 1990 OCLC Distinguished Seminar Series.
OCLC visitor describes computer network development in Yugoslavia by Erik Jul
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1
edition published
in
1991
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
Describes a presentation made by Radovan S. Spiridanov.
OCLC research projects and the future of cataloging by Erik Jul
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图书
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1
edition published
in
1991
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
SGML plays important role in electronic publishing by Erik Jul
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图书
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1
edition published
in
1992
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
Project to analyze Internet information is under way by Erik Jul
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图书
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1
edition published
in
1992
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
Librarians assist cataloging experiment by Erik Jul
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图书
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1
edition published
in
1992
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
Elliot Soloway speaks on new technologies for learning by Erik Jul
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1
edition published
in
1992
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
Assessing information on the Internet : toward providing library services for computer-mediated communication by Martin Dillon
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1
edition published
in
1994
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
This paper presents results of the OCLC Internet Resource project, which focused on two areas of inquiry : investigating the nature of electronic textual information available through remote access using the Internet, and investigating the practical and theoretical problems associated with creating machine-readable cataloging (MARC) records of these objects using current USMARC format for computer files and Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2d. ed. revised.
The PURL project by Keith E Shafer
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图书
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1
edition published
in
1996
in
英语
and held by
1
library
worldwide
A PURL is a Persistent Uniform Resource Locator. Functionally, a PURL is a URL (Uniform Resource Locator). However, instead of pointing directly to the location of an Internet resource, a PURL points to an intermediate resolution service. The PURL project is a result of OCLC participation in the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Uniform Resource Identifier working groups. PURLs satisfy many of the requirements of Uniform Resource Names (URNs). They use current technologies and can be transitioned smoothly into a URN architecture once it is in place.